In a mildly interesting bit of news for a Friday, Intel has notified its customers that it will use an additional assembly and test facility in a bid to improve supply of its latest desktop Coffee Lake processors. The new site has been certified equivalent for the said CPUs, so the finished products will be identical to those that are available today.

When Intel released its Core i7-8700K, Core i7-8700, Core i5-8600K, Core i5-8400, and other Coffee Lake products in early October, they could not meet demand and many stores did not have the higher-end models in stock at all. Today, the unlocked Core i7-8700K and i5-8600K are overpriced (compared to their MSRP) and not readily available at all times (with stock status changing several times a day), which means that their supply is not continuous and Intel cannot meet demand from all of its customers.

Basic Specifications of Intel Core i5/i7 Desktop CPUs
CPU Cores Freq.
(Base)
Freq.
(Boost)
L3 TDP PN Price
i7-8700K 6/12 3.7GHz 4.7GHz 12 MB 95W CM8068403358220
BX80684I78700K
$359
$370
i7-8700 3.2GHz 4.6GHz 65W CM8068403358316
BX80684I78700
$303
$312
i5-8600K 6/6 3.6GHz 4.3GHz 9 MB 95W CM8068403358508
BX80684I58600K
$257
$258
i5-8400 2.8GHz 4.0GHz 65W CM8068403358811
BX80684I58400
$182
$187
i3-8350K 4/4 4.0GHz N/A 8 MB 91W CM8068403376809
BX80684I38350K
$168
$179
i3-8100 3.6GHz N/A 6 MB 65W CM8068403377308
BX80684I38100
$117

To assemble and test Coffee Lake dies into actual Core i7/Core i5 processors, Intel has been using its primary assembly and test lines in Malaysia. Binning high-end CPUs is a challenging and time-consuming operation because far not all dies can hit required frequency and TDP. In general, the more silicon you bin, the more higher-end products you can get, but bandwidth of assembly and test lines is relatively limited.

To ensure a continuous supply of the popular six-core Core i7-8700K, Core i7-8700, Core i5-8600K, and Core i5-8400 processors, Intel will adding another assembly and test factory located in Chengdu, China. At least initially, the site will be used to assemble and test tray/OEM versions of the said CPUs. Intel’s assembly and test facilities are a part of Intel’s Copy Exactly! (CE!) program — all methodologies and process technologies they use across different production sites across the world are the same. As a result, performance, quality, reliability and other characteristics of CPUs produced, tested and assembled in different facilities are said to be equivalent.

Intel’s customers will begin to receive the aforementioned processors assembled in China starting from December 15. Since the factories in Malaysia will continue to be used, there will be Intel’s Core i7-8700K, Core i7-8700, Core i5-8600K, and Core i5-8400 CPUs assembled either in China or Malaysia going forward.

Intel has been working to improve yields of its chips produced using various versions of its 14 nm fabrication process for three years now, so unless there is an anomaly in Coffee Lake's design or the 14++ technology, yields of the CFL chips should be predictable. Besides, Intel uses its 14 nm manufacturing technologies in different fabs now, so processing more wafers is not an issue for the company. And while the bandwidth of assembly and test facilities is not usually an issue for CPUs, in the case of Coffee Lake this may be the case, if Intel's PCN is anything to go by.

Since Intel does not quantify how many Coffee Lake dies it processes now in Malaysia and how many dies are expected to be assembled and tested in China due to competitive and other reasons, it is impossible to tell how the addition of another site affects supply of its latest processors in general and their high-end versions in particular. A good news here is that Intel promises that with the addition of the Chinese assembly & test lines, supply of tray versions of the six-core Coffee Lake CPUs will be more continuous. As a result, supply and demand for boxed versions of the said chips will likely get more balanced too.

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Source: Intel

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  • guidryp - Friday, November 17, 2017 - link

    It looks more like demand is so high, that they need to bring on additional resources.
  • Mr Perfect - Friday, November 17, 2017 - link

    Yeah, there are probably six years worth of 4c8t CPU owners who now finally have a reason to build a new PC. Demand would have been high regardless.
  • piroroadkill - Friday, November 17, 2017 - link

    Exactly. It's nuts that Intel didn't plan properly for this, after years of small upgrades. People want a goddamn 8700K. There's nothing else like it on the market for gaming performance.
  • shabby - Friday, November 17, 2017 - link

    It was planned... planned to be a paper launch.
  • Alexvrb - Friday, November 17, 2017 - link

    They wanted to win... on review sites anyway. Availability be damned! We'll get more chips out in 2018.
  • Lolimaster - Saturday, November 18, 2017 - link

    Ryzen 5 1600 is the same thing offering 90% of the fps for $200
  • ianmills - Friday, November 17, 2017 - link

    Only its the exact same speed other than the additional cores. It's a weak upgrade except for specific use cases
  • Alexvrb - Friday, November 17, 2017 - link

    Sir, have you been smoking crack again? Stock speeds are up, they overclock well, and the extra cores aren't just for lulz. The new chips absolutely crush their predecessors in today's demanding titles, let alone tomorrow's. I'm not a fan of their "launch" due to serious supply constraints, but the processors are undeniably a massive upgrade. One of the biggest upgrades to their lineup in recent years.
  • timbotim - Saturday, November 18, 2017 - link

    Couldn't agree more.
    June 2014 i7-4790K 4.0GHz/4.4GHz turbo
    October 2017 i7- 8700K 3.7GHz/4.7GHz turbo
    3 years, 4 generations and a worse power figure to achieve so little - no wonder AMD caught them up!
  • HStewart - Friday, November 17, 2017 - link

    I not too concern about Coffee Lake, I waiting for Coffee Lake and Ice Lake ( 10nm ), that is where it worth upgrading.

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